We had high hopes for the Mozilla Utah Two Year Anniversary. It was to be an event to really raise awareness on our community, to show how we've grown and the cool projects our community is involved with. We really wanted to get everyone excited about making an impact!
It took a lot, and I mean A LOT of work....but we didn't get the attendance we had hoped for. I especially felt disillusioned after all of the time and effort spent to get the event off the ground and facilitate great opportunities for impact.
We got to hear about a really awesome app that drives a car robot, we saw the beginnings of a fun 3-D game for FirefoxOS that Brad Midgley is building. His presentation was phenomenal! The presentation was so awesome that it made the event especially disappointing because of the lack of attendance. We still had about 8 localizers at the event working on Romanian and Mexican Spanish, and the rest of the attendees at the app hackathon. There were good things accomplished at this event...
However, the disappointment provided a unique opportunity for the leadership council to gather and reevaluate our approach and direction at Mozilla Utah. Why spend so much time organizing, instead of doing?! Instead of working so hard to build our own community, why not collaborate with the many other organizations out there and add to what they have already built up?
This event was a great time to redirect our efforts into more of a grassroots movement. We don't need to spend our time filing budgets and filling out reports. We can get together at coffee shops, present at other user groups like we did with Girl Develop It, which was a huge success! We can get involved with the community center and teach web literacy there. We can collaborate on our localization efforts via IRC or meet up at a local coffee shop. There's no need to have elaborate events that require lots of time to manage.
It's time to restructure our community to eliminate the overhead and get back to what motivates us to volunteer for Mozilla - meaningful contributions and personal growth. It's time to see our own impact every single second we spend promoting an open and accessible web.
I'm excited for the new direction we are about to take.



